Paget joined a Public relations consultancy on leaving the army, and settled down to write more military history. In 1971 he was appointed editor of
The Guards Magazine, where he worked until 1993. Works followed in rapid succession:
The Story of the Guards (1976),
The Pageantry of Britain (1979), and ''Wellington's Peninsula War
(1990) a huge work that took years of research and study to complete, which was shortly followed by a history of the greatest battle, Hougoument: The Key to Victory at Waterloo
(1992). He edited Second to None The History of the Coldstream Guards (1650-2000)
(2000) and his final book was a biography of his father: The Crusading General: The Life of General Sir Bernard Paget GCB DSO MC'' (2008), commander of Home Forces solely responsible to Churchill for the defence of Britain during the dark days of 1940. He led battlefield tours specialising in the
Battle of Waterloo, the
Peninsula War, the
Crimean War and the
Gallipoli Campaign. He was a
Gentleman Usher to the Queen from 1971 to 1991. Paget was chief usher at the wedding of the
Prince of Wales in 1981 and also at the wedding of the
Duke of York in 1986. He inherited the title 4th Baronet from his Uncle Sir James Paget, 3rd Baronet in 1972 and was appointed
CVO in 1984. For many years he was involved with the Paget Association, who research
Paget's disease, discovered by his famous ancestor
James Paget. Aged 92 he was asked to a celebration at
James Paget University Hospital in Great Yarmouth marking the bicentenary of James Paget's birth. The old soldier died of
septicaemia at the age of 95. He had married in 1954, an American Diana Frances, daughter of Frederick Farmer, whom he met while working in the Pentagon. They had a son and a daughter. They lived in
Lymington,
Hampshire, before Diana died in 2004. Daughter, Olivia had a distinguished career at the Foreign Office before retiring in 2016. He was succeeded in the baronetcy by his son Sir Henry Paget, 5th Baronet, a merchant banker with
St James's Place, wealth management company. ==References==